In June, it will be 52 years since George Wallace stood in the schoolhouse door.
It happened at the University of Alabama, where two African-American students, Vivian Malone and James Hood, were attempting to register.

There's this speech I give my students. Distilled, it goes like this.
"Your primary asset as a journalist is not your dogged curiosity, your talent for research or your ability to make prose sing on deadline.

He had his first major breakdown when he was 26.
A man known for his sunny, outgoing temperament became sullen and withdrawn. He spoke of suicide. It got so bad that a couple took him into their home to ensure he did not hurt himself.

We should have seen this one coming. This is America, a country having no shortage of people with, apparently, too much time on their hands. So someone should have predicted Cake Wars II.
No, that's not a new summer blockbuster from Marvel.

Tucker Carlson said on Fox that more children die of bathtub drownings than of accidental shootings. They don't.
Steve Doocy said on Fox that NASA scientists faked data to make the case for global warming. They didn't.

Imagine this: You get pulled over by police. Maybe they claim you were seven miles over the speed limit, maybe they say you made an improper lane change. Doesn't matter, because the traffic stop is only a pretext.

You're like a dull knife, just ain't cuttin', just talkin' loud and saying nothing.
- James Brown
Granted, it's not entirely fair to use that lyric to describe Jeb Bush's comments on same-sex marriage.